“Alien Megastructure” Star Resumes Its Bizarre Behavior After 2-Year

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When astronomers turn to Twitter to ask everyone who has
access to a big enough telescope to look at the sky, you know something is up.
Indeed, something was up this past weekend, as one of the Universe’s most
mysterious stars reignited some baffling behavior.

“As far as I can tell, every telescope that can look at it right now is
looking at it right now,” Tennessee State University astronomer Matt
Muterspaugh told Loren Grush at The Verge. Mutterspaugh, like fellow astronomer Jason
Wright from Penn State University, noticed the dip in KIC 8462852’s light
emissions this past weekend.

“[W]e are officially on alert and we are asking astronomers on telescopes
… to please take spectra (light measurements) of the star,” Wright told CNet. As early as Friday, he already observed that
Tabby’s Star had dimmed by three percent in just a couple of days.

Discovered in 2009, KIC 8462852 came to be known as Tabby’s Star because a
team of astronomers, led by Tabetha Boyajian from Yale University, noticed the
unusual way its light dims. It’s not uncommon for a stars’ light to dim when
planets orbiting around it pass in front of it relative to Earth. Tabby’s Star,
however, didn’t follow the usual pattern of such dips in light, suggesting no
periodic orbiting of planets or other cosmic bodies.

Still Probably Not Aliens

Naturally, such a phenomenon tugged on the curiosity of astronomers, and
a number of possible explanations have been suggested. The most common, and
perhaps popular among these — you guessed it — is that something alien is the cause. One astronomer
thinks that a Dyson Sphere is causing the strange dips, thereby
nicknaming Tabby’s Star as the “alien megastructure” star.

However, as much as we’d (maybe) love to find aliens at the root of this
strange obvservation, other astronomers have found, and are developing, other
explanations.

Some think that comet swarms, debris from a devoured planet, or possibly even space dust floating around the star are causing the
unusual light emissions. Still, others suggest that it could all just be flawed data, which is why nothing
conclusive has been said yet about Tabby’s Star. Simply, there wasn’t enough
data from two years ago to say anything definitively.

Latest data

Image Credit: David Kipping/Twitter

“We were kind of stuck in a spot where we couldn’t do anything,” Boyajian told The Verge. “We had all the data we could, and to learn
anything more, we needed to catch it in action again.”

Now, there is now a lot more data to use, but it would take time for
researchers to fully consider what the information could tell us about Tabby’s
Star. It’s also possible that the new data won’t result in anything definitive,
but it’s worth a shot. Some data is better than no data at all. At the very
least, it’ll help us to better understand curiosities in the cosmos like KIC
8462852.